| File:
  <cleonymi.htm>                                            [For educational
  purposes only]        Glossary            <Principal Natural Enemy Groups>             <Citations>             <Home> | 
 
| HYMENOPTERA  Pteromalidae, (Cleoneminae) (Chalcidoidea) -- <Images> & <Juveniles>     Description             The subfamily was once considered
  as a separate family, Cleonymidae. 
  Pteromalidae now includes the former separate families, Cleonymidae,
  Miscogasteridae and Spalangiidae, which have been designated subfamilies
  Cleoneminae, Miscogasterinae and Spalangiinae, respectively.  For the present, discussions of these
  various subfamilies will be separate because of considerable distinctness
  among them.             Three species for which some
  information is available are Schizonotus
  sieboldi Ratz. (Cushman 1917,
  Dowden 1939), S. paillotti F. & F. (Faure 1926) and
  Cheiropachys colon L. (Russo 1926,
  1938).              
  Schizonotus sieboldi
  is gregarious and external on the pupae of Plagiodera versicolor
  Laich. and closely related chrysomalid beetles in the northeastern U.S. and
  Europe.  Dowden (1939) indicated that
  it is an important factor in natural control of this host.  Adult parasitoids occur in protected
  places and winter and attack the first brood of hosts in springtime.  During oviposition the ovipositor is
  thrust beneath the pupa from the side, and one or more eggs are laid on the
  thorax between the appendages, although sometimes also on the abdomen or
  dorsum.  Adult females feed upon host
  body fluids that exude from the puncture made in the dorsum after
  oviposition.  Clausen (1940) commented
  that this is one of the few parasitic species that can develop externally
  upon exposed hosts, although the larvae are found between the body of the
  fixed host and the leaf, so that such conditions simulate the confined
  quarters of a burrow or cocoon.            
  Schizonotus paillotti
  differs from S. sieboldi in being hyperparasitic on
  some Lepidoptera through Apanteles
  in Europe.  It is a solitary external
  parasitoid of the mature larva in the cocoon.  Females feed on host body fluids prior to oviposition through a
  constructed feeding tube.             Solitary Cheiropachys colon
  parasitizes mature larvae of Scolytidae in Europe externally.  Hosts are paralyzed at the time of
  oviposition, and the large egg is deposited on the body.  Sex ratios favor females 5.5:1.   Biology & Ecology     The subfamily was once considered as a
  separate family, Cleonymidae. Pteromalidae now includes the former
  separate families, Cleonymidae, Miscogasteridae and Spalangiidae,
  which have been designated subfamilies Cleoneminae, Miscogasterinae
  and Spalangiinae, respectively. For the present, discussions of these various
  subfamilies will be separate because of considerable distinctness among them.     Three species for which some information
  is available are Schizonotus sieboldi Ratz. (Cushman 1917, Dowden
  1939), S. paillotti F. & F. (Faure 1926) and Cheiropachys colon
  L. (Russo 1926, 1938).     
  Schizonotus sieboldi is gregarious and external on the
  pupae of Plagiodera versicolor Laich. and closely related chrysomalid
  beetles in the northeastern U.S. and Europe. Dowden (1939) indicated that it
  is an important factor in natural control of this host. Adult parasitoids
  occur in protected places and winter and attack the first brood of hosts in
  springtime. During oviposition the ovipositor is thrust beneath the pupa from
  the side, and one or more eggs are laid on the thorax between the appendages,
  although sometimes also on the abdomen or dorsum. Adult females feed upon
  host body fluids that exude from the puncture made in the dorsum after
  oviposition. Clausen (1940) commented that this is one of the few parasitic
  species that can develop externally upon exposed hosts, although the larvae
  are found between the body of the fixed host and the leaf, so that such
  conditions simulate the confined quarters of a burrow or cocoon.     Schizonotus paillotti differs
  from S. sieboldi in being hyperparasitic on some Lepidoptera
  through Apanteles in Europe. It is a solitary external parasitoid of
  the mature larva in the cocoon. Females feed on host body fluids prior to
  oviposition through a constructed feeding tube.     Solitary Cheiropachys colon
  parasitizes mature larvae of Scolytidae in Europe externally. Hosts
  are paralyzed at the time of oviposition, and the large egg is deposited on
  the body. Sex ratios favor females 5.5:1.     The eggs had been described for only the
  three species by 1940 (Clausen 1940). Those of S. paillotti and S.
  sieboldi are elongate-oval or somewhat cylindrical in outline, and that
  of C. colon (Fig. 48A) is narrowed at both ends, with the
  anterior and drawn out into stalk-like form and at times folded back upon the
  main body after deposition. In S. paillotti and C. colon, the chorion
  is clothed with minute spicules though sparsely so in the last named species,
  whereas S. sieboldi bears instead a fine reticulation on one side.     The 1st instar larvae of the family are
  hymenopteriform, with small sensory setae and the integumentary setae may be
  uniformly distributed or in bands at the segmental margins. The respiratory
  system is equipped with spiracles on the mesothorax and first three abdominal
  segments.    The 2nd to 5th instar larvae present no distinctive characters.
  The sensory setae and integumentary spines are minute. Nine pairs of
  spiracles appear on the fifth instar, these being situated on the second and
  third thoracic and the first seven abdominal segments.           For details on the immature stages of
  Cleonymidae, please see Clausen (1940/62).   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   |